marcleblanc12
Mechanical
- May 7, 2014
- 29
Has anyone ever tried to solve for reaction loads on a semi trailer that has tandem axles? I've been treating it as a statically indeterminate beam to get my 3 reactions (at the kingpin and each of the axles).
I've been solving this using Clapeyron's theorem (3 moment equation) and I keep getting a very high value for one axle and a negative value on the second axle.
Here's what I'm basically trying to solve:
A trailer 45 ft long loaded with 80,000 lbs evenly distributed over the entire length. The trailer has two tandem axles spaced 5 ft apart at the back and a kingpin at the front. Using the 3 moment equation I get a reaction of 25,940 lbs at the kingpin (seems normal) but then I get 96,234 lbs at the first axle (more than the weight of the trailer) and then -44,294 lbs at the rear axle (a negative number).
This may work out mathematically, but in reality I know that these loads on the tandem axles are not the case. Has anyone else come across this before? I've tried solving this using a few different methods and still arrive at the same thing. I've done other statically indeterminate beams that have worked out to reasonable loads, but for some reason when I try to do these trailers with multiple axles close together, the reaction loads seem very odd. I've tried this on trailers with 2, 3 and even 4 axles and it still gives me the same weird results.
It seems that when I add up the reactions from the tandem axles and divide by two I get 25,970 lbs per axle (for this example), which seems closer to what I should be getting although I'm sure they're not equal. Let me know if any of you have come across this situation and figured out how to solve it.
I've been solving this using Clapeyron's theorem (3 moment equation) and I keep getting a very high value for one axle and a negative value on the second axle.
Here's what I'm basically trying to solve:
A trailer 45 ft long loaded with 80,000 lbs evenly distributed over the entire length. The trailer has two tandem axles spaced 5 ft apart at the back and a kingpin at the front. Using the 3 moment equation I get a reaction of 25,940 lbs at the kingpin (seems normal) but then I get 96,234 lbs at the first axle (more than the weight of the trailer) and then -44,294 lbs at the rear axle (a negative number).
This may work out mathematically, but in reality I know that these loads on the tandem axles are not the case. Has anyone else come across this before? I've tried solving this using a few different methods and still arrive at the same thing. I've done other statically indeterminate beams that have worked out to reasonable loads, but for some reason when I try to do these trailers with multiple axles close together, the reaction loads seem very odd. I've tried this on trailers with 2, 3 and even 4 axles and it still gives me the same weird results.
It seems that when I add up the reactions from the tandem axles and divide by two I get 25,970 lbs per axle (for this example), which seems closer to what I should be getting although I'm sure they're not equal. Let me know if any of you have come across this situation and figured out how to solve it.